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But we also know that they are still there. Black Americans are still standing. The first African American president is ending a two-term presidency as one of the best presidents in American history. Throughout the history, African-Americans were disappointed. But they are still standing!

The message has resonated with me, since. In these last days, and as here in the US, we are entering the holiday season, I could not help myself but connecting it to the situation in Rwanda, prevailing now and throughout the ages. Rwandans have gone through so much, as far as one can trace the roots of the nation: servitude, tribal divisions, colonization, revolutions, systematic repressions, dictatorships, tyrannies, interethnic massacres, exiles, wars, systematic massacres. The trials and tribulations experienced by Rwandans may, at times, seem endless. Yet, Rwandans are still standing!

Sometimes we think about our loved ones, relatives, friends and compatriots , who have fallen, have been abducted inside and outside Rwanda, falsely accused of crimes, handcuffed, and handed to torturers, are held in dungeons, are persecuted, are made permanent refugees, are summarily executed,are assassinated inside and outside Rwanda, or are banned from their or their parents’ and forefathers’ homelands. At the same time we realize that those who are responsible for these abominable acts appear to prosper out of the tragedies.

We may be tempted to give up, to give in or to think that life is not fair. But remember this: We have been disappointed over and over again, but yet, we, as a people, are still standing. You, Rwandan, reading this word, are still standing!.

That is why we cannot give up on Rwanda and our people. We need to continue on our road to the peaceful transformation of Rwanda. We need to continue to show those who persecute, kill, abduct, corrupt, harass, repress, torture, dictate, assassinate, falsely accuse, or attempt to ban us from our homeland that we will not give up on our aspirations for a peaceful transformation; that we will not succumb to their desires for destruction and perpetual tragedies.

Those who are Christians or believers may be reminded that God works in multiple ways. The message well captured by one of American greatest American singers and actors, Elvis Aron Presley, in his Farther Along lyrics, now sung as a Baptist Hymn, summarizes it well: